Jonathan Lemon wrote:
For now, you could remove the IDE devices from the config file,
until this gets fixed. Ideally, the boot blocks/loader should be
taught to boot from something other than wd() or da().
Alas, the loader uses BIOS to read the disk. Anything the BIOS can
read, so can the
After doing a cvsup yesterday evening i can't seem to boot on my
raid cotroller using the same kernel config.
Is -current probing hardware i a different way now or ??
This is a consequence of a defect in the way that the ida driver works,
and new code which resorts the disk drivers (so
Oliver Fromme [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
The gcc optimizer is traditionally buggy. I wouldn't trust a
system compiled with anything more than -O (especially on
production servers). The higher optimization levels don't
provide much of a speed improvement anyway, sometimes they make
the
On Fri, Sep 24, 1999 at 12:08:10PM +0900, Daniel C. Sobral wrote:
The point is that it _does_ hurt. Anything above -O3 is _likely_ to
have bugs.
I am forced to agree about the fact that optimisation is traditionally
buggy :)
I tried to optimize my system with -O3 and -pipe. So I build myself
a
On Thu, 23 Sep 1999, Kip Macy wrote:
In three places in your code you do the following or something similar:
ptr = (CORE_ADDR) cached_pthread.nxt;
struct pthread has no member nxt in either -current or -stable
and your patch did not add it to pthread_private.h
What did you mean for
Do you know about the RBL? How do you feel about it? We are using
it via DNS and BGP on a test basis right now.I have had legitimate
important mail blocked at Freebsd.org due to the source being on the
RBL, but that is a price I am willing to pay.
The RBL is great! There is a teensy
For those who don't know the acronymns RBL, DUL, etc... (like me a few
minutes ago :-), they are:
RBL Realtime Blackhole List
TSI Transport Security Initiative
DUL Dial-up User List
RSS Relay Spam Stopper.
More information can be found at the site: http://maps.vix.com/.
From: "Rodney W. Grimes" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Fri, 24 Sep 1999 03:00:55 -0700 (PDT)
Another thing that ISP coulds start doing (we are in process with
this now, but on a monitoring only basis, instead of a deny we
just log them) is to block all outbound from AS tcp 25 setup packets.
Not quite
The following is from BUGTRAQ. There's a fix for -stable, though there
is none for -current. Is -current vulnerable?
Regards, Phone: (250)387-8437
Cy Schubert Fax: (250)387-5766
Open Systems Group Internet: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
ITSD
On Fri, Sep 24, 1999 at 09:22:05AM -0500, Bruce Albrecht wrote:
I know this is not -current related, but then, neither is the thread
on hub.freebsd.org refusing DUL origin messages.
I have a DSL line with static IP, and all my FreeBSD mailing lists are
sent to [EMAIL PROTECTED] There are
[This thread is off topic, but ... ]
On 24 September 1999 at 3:00, "Rodney W. Grimes" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Another thing that ISP coulds start doing (we are in process with
this now, but on a monitoring only basis, instead of a deny we
just log them) is to block all outbound from AS tcp 25
"Zach N. Heilig" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The application for the tests is mpg123.
test mp3 playing time: 373 seconds.
[ ... ]
1) No Optimization
225.08 real 224.30 user 0.23 sys
[ ... ]
2) -O3 -mcpu=i486 -march=i486 -fomit-frame-pointer -fschedule-insns
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] "Matthew D. Fuller" writes:
: OK:
: #!/bin/sh
: (cvs status | grep '^File:' | grep -v 'Status: Up-to-date$') 2 /dev/null
^^ -q
Warner
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message
These days the RBL is more of a preventative measure than a blocking
measure. It has already forced most open relays to tighten up.
I'll go with that.
The DUL stops _huge_ amounts of "drive-by" spam, though...
M
--
Mark Murray
Join the anti-SPAM movement: http://www.cauce.org
To
On Fri, 24 Sep 1999 12:08:10 +0900, "Daniel C. Sobral" [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
The point is that it _does_ hurt. Anything above -O3 is _likely_ to
have bugs.
And more to the point: the FreeBSD Project will not support those who
compile their kernel or world with anything other than the
Non-authoritative answer:
zuhause.mn.org preference = 150, mail exchanger = minuet.skypoint.net
zuhause.mn.org preference = 100, mail exchanger = 205.215.217.178
postfix does not like your numeric MX record
Sep 24 01:35:46 hub postfix/smtp[77991]: warning: valid_hostname:
numeric
From: "Rodney W. Grimes" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Fri, 24 Sep 1999 03:00:55 -0700 (PDT)
Another thing that ISP coulds start doing (we are in process with
this now, but on a monitoring only basis, instead of a deny we
just log them) is to block all outbound from AS tcp 25 setup packets.
would immediately unsubscribe to any isp that decided this was acceptable
behavior on their part.
I agree.
Your work also has a serious security concern if it allows this you to
directly attatch to it's port 25.
No it doesn't, but you do bring up another good point why not to
Strange. I use the RBL on my mail server here, but it really doesn't
accomplish much. In the past 8 days it has blocked only 3 distinct
spam e-mails, and that's typical. Yet I still receive an average of
5-10 spam mails in my mailbox every day. (*Must* *stop* *fist* *of*
*death*!) A
At 03:00 AM 9/24/1999 -0700, you wrote:
Another thing that ISP coulds start doing (we are in process with
this now, but on a monitoring only basis, instead of a deny we
just log them) is to block all outbound from AS tcp 25 setup packets.
Hmm, maybe I'm interpreting this wrong (I hope so),
I agree.
Your work also has a serious security concern if it allows this you to
directly attatch to it's port 25.
No it doesn't, but you do bring up another good point why not to use the
ISP's mail server. Security. I don't want email to bounce on your box
and potentially
One of us, at least, evidently.
How much mail does the use of the MAPS DUL reject?
varies sharply from day to day. since 8/31 dul has rejected
93 connection attempts. map has rejected 361 connection attempts.
How much of that do you think is worth rejecting?
Hi, there.
We wrote experimental ACPI driver for 4.0-CURRENT.
This was just one week work so its functionallity is very very poor :-)
but I think it is good idea to start with this for developping ACPI
driver for FreeBSD because it is enough small to understand it.
If someone already started
I reinstalled -current today, and for some reason there is an extra device
generating interrupts. When I do a systat -vm 1 I find that there is a
device called rtc at irq8 generating 128 interrupts. What is it? I didn't
configure it, and it wasn't there before.
Kenneth Culver
To Unsubscribe:
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Kenneth Culver writes:
I reinstalled -current today, and for some reason there is an extra device
generating interrupts. When I do a systat -vm 1 I find that there is a
device called rtc at irq8 generating 128 interrupts. What is it? I didn't
configure it, and it
I agree.
Your work also has a serious security concern if it allows this you to
directly attatch to it's port 25.
No it doesn't, but you do bring up another good point why not to use the
ISP's mail server. Security. I don't want email to bounce on your box
and
: I would immediately unsubscribe to any isp that decided this was acceptable
: behavior on their part. I use the mail server at work for all my outgoing
: mail. Why? Because the machine is lightly loaded and I don't have to
: worry about my mail getting lost in the depths of my isp's mail
According to Bruce Albrecht:
zuhause.mn.org preference = 150, mail exchanger = minuet.skypoint.net
zuhause.mn.org preference = 100, mail exchanger = 205.215.217.178
^^^
This is plainly wrong. You're not allowed to put IP
, it works properly with no crash.
I'm currently running on a snap built this morning (0924), but it was
also happening on a snap from 0914.
Crash info, vinum config, and disk info are below. Let me know if I
can provide any additional information.
Thanks,
Brad
# uname -a
FreeBSD 4.0-19990924-SN
On Thu, 23 Sep 1999, Rodney W. Grimes wrote:
You need to find and fix what ever it is that is not dieing when being
told to die. Your work around is a bandaid that only hides the real
problem, which is probably a bug some place in something. amd and NFS
are good first conidates. Just what
Kenneth Culver writes:
I reinstalled -current today, and for some reason there is an extra device
generating interrupts. When I do a systat -vm 1 I find that there is a
device called rtc at irq8 generating 128 interrupts. What is it? I didn't
configure it, and it wasn't there before.
It
Darryl Okahata wrote in list.freebsd-current:
"Zach N. Heilig" [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The application for the tests is mpg123.
test mp3 playing time: 373 seconds.
[ ... ]
1) No Optimization
225.08 real 224.30 user 0.23 sys
[ ... ]
2) -O3
Ben Smithurst writes:
Bruce Albrecht wrote:
Non-authoritative answer:
zuhause.mn.org preference = 150, mail exchanger = minuet.skypoint.net
zuhause.mn.org preference = 100, mail exchanger = 205.215.217.178
"205.215.217.178." almost certainly does not have an address (A)
I just ran across this:
Debugger("isp_attach")
Stopped at Debugger+0x37: movl$0,in_Debugger
db cont
whoa, other_cpus: 0x0002, stopped_cpus: 0x
panic: stop_cpus() failed
mp_lock = 0002; cpuid = 0; lapic.id =
Automatic reboot in 15 seconds - press a key on the
As Gary Schrock wrote ...
At 03:00 AM 9/24/1999 -0700, you wrote:
Another thing that ISP coulds start doing (we are in process with
this now, but on a monitoring only basis, instead of a deny we
just log them) is to block all outbound from AS tcp 25 setup packets.
Hmm, maybe I'm
Warner Losh wrote in list.freebsd-current:
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED] "Matthew D. Fuller" writes:
: OK:
: #!/bin/sh
: (cvs status | grep '^File:' | grep -v 'Status: Up-to-date$') 2 /dev/null
^^ -q
Hm, that variant does not display the directory names at all.
I'd like to propose
I totally agree with this, while it doesn;t stop all spam (and some has to
be added manually to my own lists) I've dramatically cut down on spam to
my machines.
DUL, while I'm not sure whether we should take this to -chat or not since
we are now getting into noise on the -current list, is also
If you use sendmail, this is pretty trivial, its a slight modification to
the original RBL check :
# DNS based IP address spam lists
R$* $: ${client_addr}
R$-.$-.$-.$-$: $(host $4.$3.$2.$1.rbl.maps.vix.com. $:
$1.$2.$3.$4 $)
R$-.$-.$-.$-$: $(host
I just ran across this:
Debugger("isp_attach")
Stopped at Debugger+0x37: movl$0,in_Debugger
db cont
whoa, other_cpus: 0x0002, stopped_cpus: 0x
panic: stop_cpus() failed
mp_lock = 0002; cpuid = 0; lapic.id =
Automatic reboot in 15 seconds - press a
This morning I made world, updated XFree86 and kde, which didnĀ“t seem to
be a problem until I started X and nowI get revers Icon's - silhouettes
on the kde background. I get no text but a block where the text is and
the mouse will often change to a block. I have never seen anything like
it. I
On Friday, 24 September 1999 at 16:36:54 -0400, Brad Chisholm wrote:
I'm having a problem where the "vinum start" command crashes my system.
This happens regardless of whether it's being issued during bootup via
/etc/rc or from the command line on a running system.
Interestingly, however, if
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Pat Lynch [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If you use sendmail, this is pretty trivial, its a slight modification to
the original RBL check :
There's a nice patch for the sendmail 8.9.3 that allows you to
specify multiple blacklists easily (e.g., both RBL and DUL).
I understand the ISP's POV here, but I have legitimate reasons to telnet
to port 25 on various machines (most of them administered by me), and
I'd never dream of using an ISP that would stop me from doing so.
--
Ben Rosengart
UNIX Systems Engineer, Skunk Group
StarMedia Network, Inc.
To
I noticed a little quirk in the pcm driver -- it is reversing the channels
in my sb16! The first couple times I play a certain mp3 that starts out
(normally) in the left channel, it plays correctly in the left channel.
Then suddenly it will switch, and start out in the right channel. The
mixer
[subject updated]
On 24-Sep-99 Oliver Fromme wrote:
Hm, that variant does not display the directory names at all.
I'd like to propose the following variant. It's a bit longer
than my first proposal, but just as efficient (maybe even more
efficient, because it doesn't have to fork two
At 10:59 PM 9/24/99 +0200, Wilko Bulte wrote:
As Gary Schrock wrote ...
all mail would still have to go through the local isp's. Personally, I
would immediately unsubscribe to any isp that decided this was acceptable
behavior on their part. I use the mail server at work for all my
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